I’m still keeping my reading log on Google Spreadsheets, however, I sort of re-upped my investment in Good Reads and updated my last two years of reading logs there. I want to test out that site’s functionality a bit more, possibly looking to keep my logs there permanently. You can check out my Good Reads shelves here.

According to Good Reads’ reading stats, I read 85 books/comics last year. And here are the breakdowns of my starred reviews.

The stats also say I read 18,158 pages last year. kind of strange to see that giant number written down as the number of pages I’ve read. Yikes.

So, the same rules apply here as on my movie list. Only new reads in 2018 count. No re-reads, which I did a few last year. It’s been hit or miss the last few years on getting 5 of both comics and books. However, I was able to get 5 books and 5 comics for this list. Let’s see what they are.

Books

The Making of Star Wars – JW Rinzler – I didn’t read this one straight through. If you look at my read dates for this they go from Jun-Dec. It took me several months because, first, the book is f’n HUGE. And second, because I would read it in between other books a section at a time. It’s a big, weighty tome but there’s a metric ton of information, charts, pictures, scripts, artwork. You name it, it’s in there. Rinzler combs through the Lucasfilm archives and gives us a micro drilldown on the making of the first movie in the trilogy. So much information and so much to process that I personally couldn’t have read it straight through. But I’m glad I finished it. I’m looking forward to Rinzler’s other two books in this series (Empire and Jedi).

Dark Matter – Blake Crouch – I got this on a lark during a Kindle sale. The premise was intriguing. Jason Desson is mugged one night and knocked unconscious. He wakes up in a place he’s never seen before in a life he never lived. His wife is not his wife, his son was never born, and he’s not a college professor but a celebrated genius scientist who has achieved something impossible. Is it this new world or the old one that is the dream? See? Great premise. And the book delivers. I really enjoyed where this book went. It’s dark, but a fun read. It gets pretty bonkers at the end, too. Very much enjoyed this book, so much so I bought a few more of Crouch’s novels after I read it.

Vicious (Villains Book 1) – VE Schwab – I’d had my eye on this book for a while. The sequel, Vengeful, just came out the end of last year. During their senior year, two brilliant college students form a theory that under the right conditions, humans could develop extraordinary abilities. But when their research goes from theoretical to experimental, things go horribly wrong. I really liked this book. It’s a much darker take on super heroes and sets up a really cool world. Several twists happen that I somewhat saw coming, but it didn’t bother me because I was enjoying the ride. Yes, I *will* read the sequel.

The Rap Year Book – Shea Serrano – Again, sort of bought on impulse at an end of the year Kindle sale. Features the most important song from every year in hip-hop from like 1979 to 2014. It’s the author that’s making the determination of “most important”. I’m glad I got it, because rather than just be a giant list of facts, it’s actually a covert telling of the history of rap through the veneer of the most important singles of each year. Lots of dropped information and the author is very entertaining in his writing. And as I suspected, once the book got to about 2003, I hadn’t heard of any of the songs. I was literally scratching my head the rest of the book.

Billy the Kid: An Autobiography – Daniel Edwards – I thought long and hard about putting this book in. But the more I thought, the more I realized it needs to go here. If you’re at all interested in Billy the Kid or even the Wild West like I am, then this is a *very* intriguing read. I talked about it on episode 49 of Hellbent for Letterbox. This book does two things, first, it gives you a thorough account of the whole Brushy Bill Roberts saga through the original interviews with him in the late 40s. Second, it supplements and comments on Brushy Bill’s story with research, facts, photo comparisons and conjecture from a third party, the author, in modern day. You could almost call it the Brushy Bill Roberts Interviews: The Annotated Edition. Daniel Edwards really digs in and tries to get to the bottom of the whole Brushy Bill saga. I’d never really delved into that story, I just assumed it was all a bunch of bull, but there is so much to Brushy Bill’s story that I didn’t know! Really opened my eyes to a few things.

Time to move on to…

Comics

Jeff Lemire books (Old Man Logan, Hawkeye, Thanos, Green Arrow) – I sort of went through a tear of Jeff Lemire comics last year. And I can’t pick one so I’m just going to group them together like I’ve done for the Jason Aaron Thor comics. I started with Lemire/Sorrentino’s Old Man Logan series which pulls Mark Millar’s creation into the Marvel Universe proper. Loved it. Still reading through the series. Then I tackled the Thanos comic which is an excellent series devoted to the mad Titan. It’s huge, it’s cosmic, it’s epic. I was already a fan of the Matt Fraction Hawkeye solo comics, so I was intrigued to see how Lemire would continue that series in All-New Hawkeye. And it’s pretty awesome. I love the developing relationship between Clint and Kate Bishop. Finally, I found out late last year that Lemire took over the New 52 Green Arrow comic. So I read it and it was a lot of fun as well! Check out all of these, and while I’ve been a Lemire fan for a while, this latest run of comics has made him a must read for me.

The Mighty Thor: The Death of Thor – Jason Aaron – And speaking of Jason Aaron’s Thor comics, he makes it on the list *again* this year with the finale to his previous Thor run. I’ve spoken at length on these year end blogs and a few times on several podcasts about my love of Jason Aaron’s Thor. It’s great, I love it, and this finale to the Jane Foster Thor saga is epic and heartbreaking and great.

Jughead’s Time Police – So, yes, I bought all six issues of this comic off the rack back in 1990. And yes, I do, in fact, still have every one of those issues. That did not stop me from buying the full collection in digital format last year and reading the entire series. I’m surprised how much I still really like it. I almost didn’t add it to this list because I was labeling it a re-read, but honestly, I don’t think I’d ever actually finished the whole series. I think I’d only read that first issue. So the *whole* series was new to me. It’s hokey, and cheesy, but in a very sweet way and the entire premise is wacky and fun. Elements of this comic’s characters and story line even get a few call outs in the new Jughead reboot by Chip Zdarsky. And this comic was ground zero for the creation of my 50cent Bin Teen Titans on Nerd Lunch last year.

Weapon X – Greg Pak – I’m a huge fan of Greg Pak. His Planet Hulk is phenomenal and I love Totally Awesome Hulk. So I was intrigued by this team book featuring Domino, Lady Deathstrike, Warpath, Sabretooth and Old Man Logan being hunted by deadly, shape shifting assassin robots sent by the reformed Weapon X program which is now looking to eradicate all former members of the program. Lots of fun with this eclectic and volatile team.

That Archie comics reboot by Mark Waid and Fiona Staples – I was curious about this because I love Mark Waid, and I’m a mild fan of *some* things Archie (see two entries up). So I was morbidly curious how this “reboot” was going to be handled. And it’s pretty great. It’s much in the same vein as the CW Riverdale series, but this comic reboot came first in 2015, so I guess the 2017 Riverdale took it’s cues from the comic. I really like how it sort of reinvents Riverdale. All the characters are great, Betty is adorable, and Veronica is actually not that bad. In volume 3, we meet Cheryl Blossom and, YIKES, she’s a force to be reckoned with. Give it a shot, I think you’re gonna like it, unless, of course, you’re horrified they even tried to reboot Archie in any way.

So, those are my favorite books/comics I read in 2018. There were a lot more I could’ve put on, and normally, right here, I’d put in some honorable mentions. But I may actually split out the honorable mentions into their own article. So look for that soon. And you can see all my ratings/mini reviews for the last two years on my Good Reads account. Check it out. Friend me. I need friends.

Hope you enjoyed this 2018 round up. Can’t wait to see what this year brings.

Man, 2017. That was a RIDE. Kind of crazy it’s over. But one good thing we get out of it is another of my semi-famous year end round up articles.

My book/movie logs have sort of gone through an upheaval the last two years. Back in 2008-2009ish I first put them up on Google Spreadsheet. Then, in 2016, I converted over to an online database tool called Airtable. I *really* liked the features and functionality of Airtable plus their iOS app was pretty slick. However, I found out in early 2017 that the free version of Airtable only holds so many rows of data and that I had just busted up against the ceiling with both of my movie/book log databases. If I wanted more, I’d have to pay. Not willing to do that for these logs I once again searched for a replacement and wound up taking another look at Google Spreadsheet. I decided to see if I could mimic some of the Airtable functionality in Google. I was partially successful. Through some fancy custom cell formatting, template sheet data validation and a little bit of script writing I was able to punch up the usefulness of my original Google Spreadsheets logs. so I created a brand new spreadsheet, called it Book Log v2 and reimported all my data. Now I have a visually nice representation of the books I read throughout the year including some cell highlighting for the current year and my rating system. Here’s a quick look at the Book Log v2 in Google.

All of this maneuvering and formatting is to make articles like this year end list easier to do. So, let’s get on with it.

The rules, this list contains 5 books and 5-ish comics that I read for the first time in 2017. No re-reads. That particular rule really hampered the amount of books I could pick from because I did a lot of re-reads this year. I’m re-reading the Artemis Fowl series and I did a few Star Wars re-reads this year so my “new to me” books in 2017 were much lower than usual. But the comics were *also* hard to pick because I read a ton of them this year and there were some stellar entries. So let’s see what I decide. I don’t even know myself as I’m typing this.

Books

The Reckoners Trilogy by Brandon Sanderson – I picked up the first two books of this series on a lark in an Amazon sale for super cheap. I was aware of the author having already read one of his other more famous works, Mistborn, which made this list back in 2015. These books sounded interesting, sort of a dystopian future involving super heroes. Several years before the books begin, a red sun called Calamity appears in the sky and causes certain people to gain powers. These people are called Epics. There are different levels of Epics based on the strength of their power profile. Unfortunately, when someone gains powers and they start to use them, they change. They become meaner. More vain. Paranoid. It causes the Epics to essentially take over the world and create little fiefdoms in the larger cities. The books follow a small resistance group called The Reckoners that work behind the scenes to undermine and even kill the worst of the Epics.
So I read the first two books, then there was a short story Sanderson wrote set in this world called Mitosis that I read, and I finally picked up the third and final book in the series and finished it all this year. One of Sanderson’s strengths is world building. He creates these super interesting worlds that work like our world but are different in many interesting ways. Mistborn was the same way. Just watching the mechanics of these books’ worlds happen is fascinating and he builds interesting characters in both regular humans and Epics. So, this series is a winner. Definitely give it a shot.

George Washington’s Secret Six by Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger – I love reading hyper focused history books involving little known tidbits of US history, especially in the revolutionary war period. I know the Culper Ring was a hot topic for a while leading to this book, a TV show, and also a fictional thriller series by Brad Meltzer which all revolve around the secretive spy organization (side note: I’ve read that fictional thriller, it’s called Inner Circle and it’s pretty good, if a bit long). This book is a pretty great condensed history of the Revolutionary War that mostly focuses on the real life exploits of Washington’s Culper Spy Ring and it reveals who all was in the ring and what they risked and sacrificed to be a spy during the Revolutionary War. It’s totally engaging and I really loved it. I’m now very interested in reading more of Kilmeade/Yaeger’s history books. The next book involves Thomas Jefferson and Tripoli Pirates.

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child by JK Rowling – I decided I wanted to read this book but I also realized it had been a few years since I’d read the original series in full, so I decided to do a re-read of the Harry Potter series first. I started Sorcerer’s Stone on Dec 14, 2015 and finished Deathly Hallows on Dec 29, 2016. I borrowed a copy of this book from a friend and with much trepidation I began to read it this past summer (I had no idea how this was going to come off). I shouldn’t have worried. It’s delightful. Almost a celebration of the entire Harry Potter series. It sort of Back to the Future II‘s the story of Harry Potter. The story takes place years later. It involves our heroes’ children and what they deal with having such famous parents. We get kids that don’t fit in and fall in with friends other people think they shouldn’t have due mainly to parents’ old rivalries. There are time turners and visits to events from the original books, but now we see them from another angle. I haven’t gone out to see what the reviews on this are but I could see people possibly not being happy because there’s a lot of retread over the original book stories. Maybe even a bit of fan pandering. But honestly, that’s why I loved it. The characterizations were spot on. The events were fun and I felt “whisked away” into whatever adventures the book took me. It was a surprise how much I liked it. I wasn’t originally going to buy this book, but I liked it so much I wound up buying the paperback at Sam’s to put on my shelf right next to Deathly Hallows. As good as the original series? No. But it’s a fun revisit of these characters and a world I was happy to jump right back into.

Dorothy Must Die by Danielle Paige – I read and reviewed this back in February 2017 for my ongoing “Oz Reviews” that I do here from time to time. It’s simultaneously a reinvention of Oz and a semi-sequel to the 1939 Oz film. It’s kind of hard to describe. I thought I may not like it due to how it may or may not reinvent Oz, but in actuality I quite liked the book. It uses familiar Oz iconography and builds a world around it that seems both different and the same. It’s new, but it’s familiar. I mentioned before how good Brandon Sanderson is at world building in his books. Paige does an admirable job world building in this series as well. The sheer number of Oz deep cuts that show up are impressive between characters, objects and events that are mentioned. And the story around it is interesting. I’ve since read three of the prequel novellas as well as the sequel, The Wicked Will Rise. I plan on continuing the series.

Here I go, writing another one of these year end round up articles that I’m shocked to be writing every year. 2017. CRAZY. What a ride 2016 was. Hopefully 2017 will give us a bit of a break.

This past year was an interesting year for my book/comics list. After so many years of logging my books and comics reading via Google Spreadsheet, I actually converted my logs over to an online data tool called Airtable. It’s similar to Access in that it is a relational database but the user entry interface is very simple to create and similar to Excel. Plus being able to link specific information between tables really helps in cross referencing and spelling. You have no idea how many times I misspelled author names throughout my logs.

Here’s what my book log looks like now on Airtable. I’ve converted all my logs back to when I first started in 2007.

The blue colored fields in the screenshot are actually linked to another table. I was able to also create the Rating field on the right with different color coded ratings to make it easy at a glance to see what is going to make my year end list and what isn’t. Plus, Airtable makes all of this data entry even easier with a nice app for my iPhone or iPad that makes it easy to log entries on the go. Google Sheets had one as well but Airtable’s works better.

So that’s all the behind the scenes stuff. I had a better year for novels. I was able to pick 5 this year. Again, comics were booming and I had a tough time paring down to 5. But I did it.

So, without further ado, here’s the list!

Books

The Old Man and the Sea (1952) – Ernest Hemingway – I don’t read classics as often as I used to. I really need to remedy that. There are two reasons why I read this. #1, it was featured in the movie The Equalizer starring Denzel Washington as a book he’s reading. #2, Steph checked it out from the library with a bunch of other books and I, on a whim, picked it up to read. It’s actually really good. I quite enjoyed it. I’m probably not going to pick up any other Hemingway, but I’ll definitely try to read more classic lit this coming year. I’ve been wanting to re-read Twain’s Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, so maybe I can get that done.

Steve Jobs (2011) – Walter Isaacson – I’ve now read two of Isaacson’s famous biographies and let me say that I’m hooked. Back in 2014 I read his biography of Benjamin Franklin and it nearly made my year end best of list. This one about Apple founder Steve Jobs actually cracks the list. It’s not only a great portrait of a complicated man, but it’s also a great look at the beginnings of our technological age we live in now. I would love for Isaacson to tackle Bill Gates in a full book, but I’m not sure that’ll happen. Isaacson did write a book called The Innovators that really digs into the people who created the computer and the Internet; going as far back as Alan Turing and jumping forward to people like Larry Page and Bill Gates. That will probably be next on my Isaacson reading list and the closest I’ll get to a full Gates biography by him.

Star Wars: Catalyst – A Rogue One Novel (2016) – James Luceno – The “New Canon” of Star Wars books since Disney has taken over has been very…hit or miss. Since those books started in Fall 2014, only one has made my year end list. And honestly, I think that one novel (Star Wars: Tarkin), also written by James Luceno, would work perfectly as a side-quel to this book. This is the written prequel to the movie Rogue One and it’s pretty great. It digs deep into the relationship between Galen Erso and Director Krennic. It also explores a bit more the rivalry between Krennic and Tarkin all while adding in backstory to how the Death Star was built and how it works and what they use to power the planet killing laser. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

I say it every year, how did we get here already? The year just flies by. Anyway, the particulars: If you’ve read this year end round up before, you know I keep my book logs online in a Google Spreadsheet. I’ve been doing it since around 2009. Only “new to me” reads in 2015 are eligible, no re-reads.

This past year was an interesting year for my book/comics list. I really had an off year for books. It was really hard to get a good list of 5 books that I really enjoyed. This year as I combed through my list of books I realized I had been in a slump of “didn’t like” and “meh” books that I just didn’t feel comfortable forcing into this year’s “best” list.

Conversely, this was a phenomenal year for comics. I had SO MANY comics I read that I just LOVED that it became very hard for me to pare it down to only five. So, I think this year I’m going to cut the book list to maybe three and increase the comic list to 8. This would be a better representation of the good stuff I’ve read this year.

Looking at the log I see I read around 106 books and comics over the course of the year. That total includes books/comics I’ve read for the first time as well as any re-reads I did this year which I’ll do from time to time. Also, I see, after two years of reading 4 books released in the current year, I uptick to 5 books I read this year that were current releases. Wow. And none of them are going to make this list. One of them almost did, but, in the end, I decided no.

Troll Mountain (2014) by Matthew Reilly – Matthew Reilly is no stranger to my “best of” books list. His Scarecrow and James West Jr novels have both made it on here. I read this fantasy novel back in February for the second installment of High Fantasy Month. It was a serial novel in three parts, each part about 55 pages long. And it’s junior fantasy, aimed at a younger audience. But like I said in my review, I really enjoyed it. The story reminded me of L Frank Baum. Lots of fun and adventure, full of hope, believing in yourself and believing that good will triumph over evil. Definitely worth a read.

Now, let’s move on to the comics I read this year that I LOVED. And there are lots of them.

Comic Books/Graphic Novels

Aquaman (The New 52) by Geoff Johns and Jeff Parker – I’m including all six of the currently released collections of this title. This first entry was probably the most relevatory comic I read all year. I’ve never been an Aquaman fan, even with the Peter David series and the hook hand/long hair iterations. I just didn’t like the character. However, I heard such good things about this take on Aquaman that I decided to read the first trade. The next thing I know, I’ve read all six of the trade paperback collections encompassing the first 40 issues or so plus annuals. Geoff Johns writes the first four collections and Jeff Parker takes over for the next two. And they are AWESOME. All of a sudden, I’m an Aquaman fan. I even dove into and read the entire side series, Aquaman and the Others, which is not as good, but still enjoyable to read. I can’t recommend this title enough. I think Cullen Bunn has taken over the writing from Jeff Parker as of issue 40 or so. I look forward to more adventures with the King of Atlantis.

Avengers vs. X-Men (2012) – This is the 12 issue maxi-series Marvel event from 2012. It launched the Marvel NOW! line of comics. It’s written by a murder’s row of my favorite comic writers; Matt Fraction, Brian Michael Bendis, Johnathan Hickman, Ed Brubaker and Jason Aaron with lots of awesome art by John Romita Jr and Adam Kubert. The story is epic, it’s awesome, it’s everything you want in an Avengers vs X-men title. I loved it. And the conclusion of this entry leads directly into…

Here we are, only two episodes away from the big Nerd Lunch 200th episode extravaganza. And I’m telling you right now, we literally have no idea what we’re doing for that. Hope it turns out.

Anyway, THIS week on Nerd Lunch, we are joined again by May and Kay to continue our series of Star Wars movie drilldowns. This time, we are looking at the second prequel movie, Attack of the Clones.

We all discuss our first time watching the movie, we really dig down deep to talk about what we liked about it and then we discuss the plethora of things we didn’t like. Some of those things may not be the ones you’re expecting. Come and check it out. Along with our insightful commentary on the movie you’ll also get lots of audio issues, several of us forget simple words like panel and arena, and CT confesses his seething hatred for 50s diners. All packed into this week’s episode!

This week on Nerd Lunch we welcome back our Star Wars expert panelists Michael May and Geek Kay in order to begin discussing the Star Wars prequels. And we are starting, appropriately so, with The Phantom Menace.

We talk a bit about the lead up to Episode I, the first trailer in November 1998, Star Wars Celebration I in Denver in May 1999 as well as our thoughts watching the movie for the first time. We then go all over the place talking about things we liked and didn’t like with this movie. There’s some of each, folks, this isn’t just a hate fest on the movie. Download this episode and join the discussion!

We talk about our first time watching the movie, we talk about our favorite characters and scenes, we even discuss things we have issues with as this particular movie is not the favorite for one of the panelists. We also discuss changes from the special edition and who could Yoda be talking about when he says “No, there is another”? Spoiler Alert: We think it’s Lando.